Controversial Trivia Questions

Yes, the way it is originally worded, Gore does not have physical possession of an Oscar.

I would give him partial credit for one because of the category (documentary) and because of his role (writer and star.)

But in a trivia contest that would be unequivocally wrong, and that’s what this thread is about. :slight_smile:

It depends on the wording:

Does Al Gore have an Oscar?
Unequivocally, no.

Did Al Gore win an Oscar?
I would argue, yes.

I would say that most people get the answer of Who discovered america wrong:

As I know it from an excerpt from a science magazine:

Al Gore invented the Academy Award.

Iirc, I thought it was some viking that actually did it first?

However, I also thought that native American Indians came from Asia when there was a land bridge? However, this can’t be verified?

Dude, if you’re gonna try to be clever with a “gotcha” question, you have to understand that this is the Dope. Unless your idea is air-tight, which, frankly, it NEVER IS with you, you’re gonna have a bad time.

I have a trivia question for you…

Why is drewtwo99 the only poster who has contributed a serious controversial trivia question to this thread so far?

And why are people still arguing about that trick question about presidents?

What to use with hotel, historic etc would be controversial, although not really a typical trivia question. Don’t think there’s really a right answer for that given changing styles in grammar.

Oh it’s definitely the right answer. You can check any grammar book printed within the last ten years.

What’s the right answer? An hotel or a hotel?

Don’t think there is one mesel.

It depends on how you stress “hotel”. If the emphasis falls on the 2nd syllable, us “an”, if not use “a”. It would vary by the speaker, because some people say HOtel, and other people say hoTEL.

But the hard and fast rule is that if a word begins with an “h” sound, use “a” if the first syllable is stressed and “an” if 2nd syllable or later is stressed… I think

Do you have a cite for this? For the record, I’ve always belived that this was the way it was worded, but I’m having a hard time finding any old timey reference books that attest to this rule.

New Interchange is the one I usually point to for laughs, but I’ve seen it in even the early editions of the Azar books.

How you worded it is how I, and most people asking the question, would mean it.

It’s from The Office(UK).

If we celebrated Independence Day September 3rd, I’d agree with you. (Yes I know this is descending into pedanticness)

Cite EVERY TIME I’ve had leaky logic! And if you can’t get EVERY LAST ONE STFU!

Oh, I think he was just being a little hyperbolic. But. . . this OP turned out to have some leaky logic. Although you had lots of company. (And I might have been one, too, had I been following those threads.)

Doesn’t change the point(lessness) of the “Martin van Buren” answer, though. :smiley: